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-   -   spill suppression in Vegas 9c (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/what-happens-vegas/472116-spill-suppression-vegas-9c.html)

Brian Luce February 2nd, 2010 04:34 AM

spill suppression in Vegas 9c
 
So I have some less than ideal 720p m2t files. Subject is 9 feet from screen, backlit, but she's got bleach blonde surfer girl hair. So she's got spill on her hair. Allegedly there's a way with secondary color corrector to resolve some of this...What are the steps?

Anyone know?

Paul Cascio February 2nd, 2010 04:57 AM

I'd be interested in this too. I always have trouble removing spill when keying in Vegas.

Thomas Moore February 2nd, 2010 05:33 AM

Sounds more like it's over exposed?

Turn on the histogram - view/videoscopes - and see where the highlights are.

Then use "levels" FX to try to bring them down a bit.

Chris Harding February 2nd, 2010 07:08 AM

Hi Brian and Paul

Here you go :

Use the following effects chain:

(1) Chroma Blur set to Medium blur
(2) Chroma Key effect.
(3) Secondary Color Corrector for spill supression

Leave Secondary Colour Correction turned off until you have a solid key. Now that may leave a little green cast on the edges especially around her blonde hair as you have already pointed out.
Now go back and turn off the check box on the Chroma Key effect and then bring up your secondary color corrector. Under FX range, use the eyedropper to select the same general green area that you selected for the chroma key effect. Now slide all of the smooth sliders to the right. Slide the highs and lows for the Luma and the Saturation controls full open and then just adjust the hue width so it looks good. Now go to the top section of the control and desaturate or rotate the hue whilst watching the offending bits only. Don't worry about the green sections as they are going to be removed by the chroma key when you enable it again.

Works pretty well!!

Chris

Thomas Moore February 2nd, 2010 09:32 AM

Hrm, interesting learn something new every day :)

Will this work with any blown highlights or just "spill" in a girl's hair?

Larry Reavis February 2nd, 2010 02:07 PM

I'm shooting against a 7'x7' green screen, with talent only about 8' in front of it - with lots of frizzy white hair. Quite a bit of spill, which i've been suppressing with NewBlu's keyer. Pretty effective, except that I lose significant detail in the hair. Would I be better off abandoning NewBlu and adopting this secondary color method?

Lee Brennan February 2nd, 2010 04:39 PM

Spill Suppression
 
Hi Chris,
Having had less than stellar results from the Vegas Keyer I started using Cinegobs Keyer which does have spill suppression. Your method for staying within Vegas was excellent. Thank you for the tip!

Chris Harding February 2nd, 2010 05:24 PM

Hi Guys

The keyer I REALLY like working with is VisualStudio from FXHome ..it has a "one click" spill fix and the ability to create all sorts of mattes too ... makes even badly lit chroma shots "fixable"

Chris

Paul Cascio February 6th, 2010 03:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris Harding (Post 1480564)
Hi Brian and Paul

Here you go :

Use the following effects chain:

(1) Chroma Blur set to Medium blur
(2) Chroma Key effect.
(3) Secondary Color Corrector for spill supression

Leave Secondary Colour Correction turned off until you have a solid key. Now that may leave a little green cast on the edges especially around her blonde hair as you have already pointed out.
Now go back and turn off the check box on the Chroma Key effect and then bring up your secondary color corrector. Under FX range, use the eyedropper to select the same general green area that you selected for the chroma key effect. Now slide all of the smooth sliders to the right. Slide the highs and lows for the Luma and the Saturation controls full open and then just adjust the hue width so it looks good. Now go to the top section of the control and desaturate or rotate the hue whilst watching the offending bits only. Don't worry about the green sections as they are going to be removed by the chroma key when you enable it again.

Works pretty well!!

Chris

Thanks Chris, this looks promising but I'm having some difficulty, or maybe I'm don't understand the procedure. "Full open" means sliding Low to the left and High, right - correct?

Then, I move Hue Width and nothing happens. Should mask be on or anything? What am I looking for? When do I turn the Chroma Key filter on again? Could you elaborate a bit more?
Thanks


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